Alzheimer’s Care at Home

Keeping your loved one in the place they most want to be… Their own home…

Providing Alzheimer’s Care at Home can be a challenge, but it can be done. Utilizing our successful model of Integrated ElderCare (IEC)® many families are able to keep their loved one in the place they most want to be… their own home! Our multidisciplinary approach has been proven effective in managing the complex needs of memory-impaired patients and their caregivers.

Are you caring for a loved one who?

  • Needs help with activities of daily living?
  • Lives alone or may be at risk?
  • Has family members that live far away?
  • Is disabled or in wheelchair?
  • Is recovering from a hospital stay?
  • Forgets to take their medications?
  • Needs a friend or companion?
  • Has Alzheimer’s disease/dementia?
  • Suffers from memory impairment?
  • Has Cardiac Disease?
  • Has Congestive Heart Failure?
  • Has Parkinson’s Disease?
  • Has Diabetes?
  • Has suffered a Stroke?

As a family caregiver, your time may be severely limited. It’s easy for caregivers to be consumed by the day-to-day tasks and complexities of caring for someone else. Feeling of isolation may set in. It’s far easier than you think to lose sight of the fact that help is out there. You Don’t Have To Do It Alone!

ElderCare at Home can Help! Call Us Anytime Toll Free: 1-800-209-4342

If you’re caring for an aging family member or friend, that suffers from Alzheimer’s disease, dementia or other memory impairment, you are not alone!We have been helping patients, caregivers and families suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, dementia or other cognitive impairments for almost 18 years!

Consider the following:

  • Nearly six million individuals in the United States and Canada alone have Alzheimer’s disease or a related dementia – a number that is expected to reach nearly 20 million in the next five decades.
  • Nearly a quarter (23.9%) of U.S. households are now involved in caring for an elderly family member or relative, spending an average of 20 hours a week in caregiving related activities.
  • Some 80% of caregivers provide unpaid assistance seven days a week.
  • More than 60% of all family caregivers say they have suffered from depression.
  • Nearly a quarter (23.9%) of U.S. households are now involved in caring for an elderly family member or relative, spending an average of 20 hours a week in caregiving related activities.

In addition to the Alzheimer’s/dementia specific geriatric care management and home care services that we provide, we offer you the following links to additional organizations that provide elder care services that may further assist you in caring for your loved one: